Saṃyutta Nikāya
3. Khandha Vagga
22. Khandha Saṃyutta
7. Arahatta Vagga
The Book of the Kindred Sayings
3. The Book Called the Khandhā-Vagga
Containing Kindred Sayings on the Elements of Sensory Existence and other Subjects
22. Kindred Sayings on Elements
7. On the Arahant
Sutta 70
Rajanīya-Saṇṭhita Suttaṃ
Lustful
Translated by F. L. Woodward
Edited by Mrs. Rhys Davids
Copyright The Pali Text Society
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The Exalted One was staying at Sāvatthī.
Then a certain brother came to the Exalted One, saluted him and sat down at one side.
So seated that brother thus addressed the Exalted One:
"Well for me, lord, if the Exalted One would teach me a doctrine,
so that hearing the doctrine of the Exalted One
I might dwell solitary,
secluded,
zealous,
ardent
and aspiring."
"For that which is inherent in what is lustful, brother,
you must put away desire."
"I understand, Exalted One!
I understand, Well-farer!"
"But how, brother, do you understand in full
that which I said concisely?"
"Body, lord, is inherent in what is lustful.
I must put away desire for that.
Feeling, lord, is inherent in what is lustful.
I must put away desire for that.
Perception, lord, is inherent in what is lustful.
I must put away desire for that.
The activites, lord, do not belong to the Self.
I must put away desire for that.
Consciousness, lord, is inherent in what is lustful.
I must put away desire for that.
That is how I understand in full
what was concisely spoken by the Exalted One."
"Well said!
Well said, brother!
Well indeed do you understand in full
the meaning of what I said concisely.
Body, brother, indeed is inherent in what is lustful.
You must put away desire for that.
Feeling, brother, is inherent in what is lustful.
You must put away desire for that.
Perception, brother, is inherent in what is lustful.
You must put away desire for that.
The activites, brother, do not belong to the Self.
You must put away desire for that.
Consciousness, brother, is inherent in what is lustful.
You must put away desire for that.
That is how, brother, the meaning of what I said concisely
is to be understood in full.'
Thereupon that brother gladly heard the words of the Exalted One
and welcomed them,
and he rose from his seat,
saluted the Exalted One
and departed.
Thereafter that brother,
dwelling solitary,
secluded,
zealous,
ardent
and aspiring,
in no long time
attained that goal supreme of the righteous life,
to win which the clansmen rightly go forth from home to the homeless,
so that in that very life
of himself
he fully understood it,
realized it
and abode therein,
and knew:
"Destroyed is rebirth,
lived is the righteous life,
done is the task,
for life in these conditions there is no hereafter."
So that brother was yet another of the Arahants.